- Joe Brown (climber)
Joe Brown (born
26 September 1930 ) is an English climber, born the seventh and last child of a family in theManchester suburb ofArdwick . He became famous for climbing during the 1950s, and was a member of theValkyrie climbing club and founding member of theRock and Ice climbing club . An early climbing partner wasDon Whillans , a fellow Mancunian and a plumber (Brown has often incorrectly been described as a 'climbing plumber'). They were among the first of a new breed of post-war climber, from working class backgrounds, in contrast to the upper and middle-class professionals who had dominated the sport up untilWorld War II .Brown is widely regarded as the outstanding pioneering English rock climber of the 1950s and early 1960s, being the creator of an unprecedented number of classic new routes (especially in
Snowdonia and thePeak District ); these were, at the time, at the leading edge of the hardest grades. Examples onDinas Cromlech in theLlanberis Pass include "Cenotaph Corner" (1952, E1, with Doug Belshaw) and "Cemetery Gates" (1951, E1, withDon Whillans ). As well as creating pioneering routes, he often helped create new types of "protection" to improve safety on climbs, and is acknowledged to have created some of the first "nuts". So famous was he that the Post Office would often deliver letters simply addressed to "The Human Fly, UK".In this context, Brown's mountaineering achievements in the Alps and Himalaya have often been overlooked: he made many very significant ascents in the Alps in the 1950s with
Don Whillans and other members of theRock and Ice climbing club and, in 1955, the first ascent of the third highest mountain in the world,Kangchenjunga in theNepal eseHimalaya , withGeorge Band . In 1956 he made the first ascent of the west summit of theMustagh Tower in theKarakoram withIan McNaught-Davis (the remaining members of the team, John Hartog and Tom Patey, reaching the main summit the next day).Apart from his numerous classic rock climbs in Britain, and his considerable mountaineering achievements abroad, Joe is also remembered for his televised rock climbs in the 1960s, three in Snowdonia, and then, in 1967, of a spectacular new route on the
Old Man of Hoy , a Scottishsea stack , withIan McNaught-Davis and other major luminaries of the climbing world, including SirChris Bonington . Fifteen years later Brown repeated the climb on the Old Man on a popular TV documentary with his second daughter Zoe. Her bubbly personality led her to being chosen as a presenter on the children's TV showTiswas .References
* Joe Brown (1967), "The Hard Years". (His autobiography.)
External links
* [http://www.joe-brown.com/component/option,com_firstascents/Itemid,60/ List of Joe Brown's first ascents]
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